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H BREAKS ES Use it like a cold cream dry Eczema eruptions right up. and Tbe moment you apply bold-sulphur to an itching or broken out skin, tbe itching stops und healing begins, says a renowned dermatologist This remarkable sulphur made into thick cream effects such prompt relief, even in aggravated Eczema, that it is never eliding source of amazement to physicians. For many years Irald-sulpbur has oc cupied a secure position in the treat ment of cutaneous eruptions by reason of its cooling, parasite-destroying prop erties and nothing has ever been found /to take its place in relieving irritable and inflammatory affections of the akin. While not always establishing a perma nent cure, yet in every instance, it immediately subdues tie itching irrita tion and heals Hie Eczema right up and. it Is often years later before any .orup tioM again manifests itself. ~ .. 4Any good druggist will supply an ounce of bold-sulphur, which should be .applied to the affected parts like tho ordinary rold creams # It isn't unpleas ant end the prompt relief afforded is very welcome, particularly when the Ec zema is accompanied with torturous itch* iag. GLASSES PLUS The day when you bought your glasses "any old place" is gone. I Present day intelligence won't permit.you to trifle or gamble on good vision. If you need- glasses you need the knowledge and ser vice which should go with the best. , Here, you get just what you want?glesses plus. T"1- -"~ ' ' Walter H. Keese & Co. Eyes Examined Free. You Want [The Maximum Value at the Minimum Price. That is what you get when you trade at the Anderson ?-?-.. .. : Company ? ? Next tiiiie you want to buy Cook Stoves. Kitch en Ware. Oil Stoves or Fireless Cookers, Allum nium Ware, Hardware, Tools, Machinery, Farm Implements, Automobile Tires and Accessories, or if you need a Plumbing or Heating Job or Re pairs try us. Prompt at tention our; specialty ........ . . ' . AadersonHardware Co "VYa Deliver the Goods." Only a few Corn and Evaporators 1 you need one see us qttick. '" KJ^4'^?f:': GERMAN REVERSES IN G? F OF RIGA fCONTlNUEI) FROM PAGE ONE.) continued I'usslan retreat. The re treat continues except in the northern section from Riga to Kovno. The British critics regard ?Lo Bal tic advance of the Germans as of su preme importance if the invaders really Intend marching on Petrograd The Russian naval victory, therefore, may have' a large effect on the German plans. There are no definite results yet I from tho Italian war d?claration I against Turkey so far as is known. It! Is expected though to Have 'un effect 1 on Rumania, which is closely connect ed with Italy. On the west front artillery duels j only are reported. Russian Gunboat Lost. Petrograd, Aug, 23.?The Petrograd newspapers assert that the Russian gunboat Slvutch with a crew of 148 men was the only Kassian warship lost In the gulf of Riga battle. Com mander Teporkassoy, who distinguish ed himself at Port Arthur, commanded the Slvutch. The number of survivors | Is unknown. London. Aug. 23.?An official Rus sian communication forwarded by the | Central News correspondent at Petro grad Gulf naval batUu at one droadnaught, two cruisers and eight torpedo boats. The dreadnaugbt was sunk by a British submarine. It ad mits the loss of tho Russian gunboat Slvutch. Rome, Aug. 23.?Several troop laden transports escorted by war j ships sailed from Naples. Syracuse, Taranto and Brindisi for an unknown destination. Orders were sealed. It Is generally believed they will be used in the operations against Turky. Vienna. Aug. 23.?The admiralty announced today that reconnaissances on Saturday established the fact that tho Italians had evacuated the island of Pelagosa in the Adriatic. They destroyed all buildings and for tifications. Schooner Sunk. London, Aug. 23.?The British schooner Martha Edmonds has been sunk. Recommends Chamberlain*? Colle, j Cholera and Illarrhoea Remedy. "I never hesltato to recommend Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and ! Diarrhoea Remedy," writes Sol "Wil liams, merchant, Jesse, Tenn. "I sell | more of It it h an of any other prepara tion of like character. I hare used It myself and found it gave me more relief iLan anything else I have ever tried fcr the same purpose." For sale by all dealers. German Destroyer Sank. . Paris, Aug. 23.?"Two Preach tor pedo boats enconntered and sank a I Gorman torpedo boat destroyer off Ostend. Belgiuf last night" says an I announcement. "Our boats were un damaged." X 2?=? ???s?ibrow. The head of a big New York busi ness concern Is exceptionally tall and his height Is further accentuated by his exceedingly slimnoss, says The Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. The other day a visitor from the South | called to see him and was duly asked to sit down. \ After they had concluded their | business tho visitor rose to go and bis host rose also, and seemed to rise and rise. The Southerner, let ting his glance travel unward, as 1 though Inspecting a new species of skyscraper, and with an expression of awed admiration, ejaculated: "Great Scott, old -nan, your pa rents must bave trained you on a j treUis!" Feminine. Inquisitive Inchabod?Father, what] is the difference between a fort and a fortress. Prof. Dlggondelve?FortresB, my son, is feminine. SO called because1 nobody ever knows just how to take it,?Puck. Tho woman who thinks the atroci ties of war are J?Bt too terrible for| anything will go ,ar?ay for the sum mer and leave the cat with a Jar ot | condensed milk and no can opener. F -r-Washington ; Times, T ' _!_ -' : V, Ahf whet relief, ? ? more t'red feet; no mere burning feet, swollen^ had smell ing, sweaty feet. ' Ko more pain in corns caUousea or tairions, Na metter what, yfttft -nrife:. ! or what under [the son you've tried witness $?i?u?? "MZ* ?rlws' out an the pel Soaoaa sguda tiv na whteh puff up the fe*tj HrtZP Is ??* "TVZr .. cure your foot troubles so ?mir sever limp or draw a* your face IK pain. 6 Your shoes won't seem tight and yoor feet will never, nsvtf. hurt or get sore, awsSea or tires. Get a 20 eent. bos at any drug or j Repartaient store, and get relief. . DK. POTE AT ON LYNCHING . Greenville Newsf An excellent discussion or lynch law,, viewed and judged not by the feet of a mere lynching, but from the djceper standpoult of cause and cure, will be found in an appended communication from Dr. E. M. Potent, president of Furman Uni versity. Do Potent treats of the basic cause of lynchings?unre strained feelings, emotions of ancient man, uncurbed by education or re ligion, having no thought for the so cial order, no consciousness of the real qualtiy of an act. Frequently the quality of an act may be deter mined by imagining the act as having become universal. Suppose every man did as you do, what would be the ef fect upon society? From such viewpoints, Dr. Poteat discusses lynching. If gives the News pleasure to reproduce his article, which is here subjoined: - Mr. Editor:?The tone of Sputhern editorials on the Georgia lynching is all that the highent righteousness could demand. But I wonder if de nunciation of mob violence does not miss the mob. A man said to me yes terday that the governor might Iden tify the murderers and bring them to trial, but not a jury in Georgia would vote to hang them; and he added, not a jury in South Carolina would do it. If this is bo then obviously wo have a work to do that lies back of public denunciation of lynching. Our. people must be reasoned with; they must be convinced that, lynch ing under all circumstances is wrong, is anti-social, and, therefore, bad from every point of view. That is to say, their conscience must be enlisted on the side of judicial procedure and against vfolenc cof every sort before denunciation of their sudden out bursts of passion will do any good. How can this be done? The an swer is educate, educate, ?Vmcatc! An ignorant people baa no sense of the long struggle of the race up from savagery to civilization, and, therefore, they are not controlled by respect for the law, which is the final product of civilization. On the con trary they are controlled by primitive impulse, passion, prejudice. And in yielding to these they are not con science' stricken as having Binned against society; they are proud as having shown their quality, their in dependence, their courage. The precious gains of the slow toiling centuries are not precious to such people. How can they be? Tho most enlightened among us have, at best, only a partial appreciation of an achievement like trial by jury, for example. And until the average man has been brought to FEEL history, to see the far past, and to aspiro to help reacb. the stUl far off goal?wc shall bo helpless In our protests against lapses into savagery. i , : Now nowhere is the growth of <;lvlllzation m or a clearly seen than in the handling of offenses?personal insult, crime agaioat person and property. The savage?whether In ancient times ,or in South Carolina today?knows ' no other way but private vengeance, and be goes forth to punish the offender hi be man ner his hot blood suggests. He does not see what would result it every body did as he does;' ho Is isolated by his rage and knows only himself j and bis enemy. It is a great stride from the lowest .stage, when men see that even "per sonal honor and comfort are safer when taken out of private hands.and entrusted to sleety as a whole, and that anything like progress is im possible until public control In the form of law Is. substituted for per sonal violence. And only here does tho great concept or Justice come in to view?dispassionate, impartial, and. therefore, majestical and. command ing. The whole people must grow op to glory in Justice, and como to see that, in Justice alone, Can personal and social security be found; and fur ther see that Justice can not exist but in tho cool air of austere fact, reach ed by patient and unprejudiced search. But 'this' is a process of edu cation which must include all the peo ple, trom tho little children lo the grand-parents; and any one can seo how long the process is. Bat we must not allow ourselves to forget that education alone?even In ih0 fall sense implied above?will never wholly meet the case, Germany thinks ', herself the most enlightened nation, yet her hero historian, Triet schke, spoko of the "epidemic of crime as a very serious danger to the na tion," and he .especially alluded to the "terrible" increase in crimes of shame (rapes, etc.)" The Indications are that the Georgia mob was made up of men of unusual intelligence; indeed, that they, were men of consequence. A highly intelligent man under sufficient provocation may become as ferocious as a wild beast; find when all is said and 'done. Relf-jion alone can con I quer nd control the tiger in him. ?. M, POTEAT. Greenville. S. C, Aug. 19. 191?. H h Honey. A Ban Francisco man tells of a I flower-growing abundant! ly near San ta Barbara whichhv peculiarity at tractive to bees. "Now," eays he, "there was a young Californien/ particularly fond of hon ey, who used.to visit a Santa. Bar bara bosterly because such a* superio? 'sort of nectar..was to be had there. "This young man married in dec course," and .the wedding trip Included Santa Bertmra, so that the bride m!Kh; teste this superb honey. Bat to his Mlsmay no honey appeared oti the breakfast table the first'morning of their1 at?y. Tfaeb J of their stay. Tb* bridegroom frown* cd. He called the old familiar waiter lover to him. "Where's my honey f he dsmandad. "The,waiter hesitated,.looked awk wardlly at the bride, and then bent {toward the young'man's ear and in a hoaTso whisper stammered.. "Why, j sir.' "?Harper's Magasine. ^ BBS. H. ?. LOVE Death Occurred Sunday Mght After Long L?nes*. Tho people of the city generality learned with deep regret the death of Mrs. Sue Plnckncy Love, wife of Mr. H. O. Love, which occurred at the j home of her Bister. Mrs. J. L. Sherard. 72? West Whltner street, Sunday night st 10 o'clock, after an illness of three months. Funeral services will he held at the home this morning at 10 o'clock, conducted by Dr. J. M. Garrison, pastor of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian church, and interment will be made in Silver Brook cemetery. Mrs. Love was 31 years of age and was the daughter of the late H. G. Pinckney, who died lu l'JOl. Three years ago she was married to Mr. H. G. Love of this city and is sur vived by her husband, one sister, Mrs. J. L. Sherard, two brothers, H. G. Pinckney of Atlanta, Ga., and J. M. Pinckney of Cleveland, Ohio, and her stepmother, Mrs. Jeun'? Pinckney. Mrs. Pinckney was a descendant of two well known South Carolina fami lies, the iMnrshalls of Abbeville and the Pinckney s of Charleston. Her death Is one of unusual sadness since she was and especially popular young matron Just at the hclghth of her womanhood. For several months she had been a natlcni sufferer, never com plaining and her loved ones watched around her bedside knowing that tb.: end would couio soon. She has a host of friends and rotatives who will mourn her dcatu. / ______ Death of Child. Nellie Jewel j Carithers, the 10 months old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Carithers of 10 Q street Brogon mill, diod'yesterday afternoon at 1-2:45 o'clock. Funeral services 'and inter ment will be hold today at Concord church at 11 o'clock. E P WORTH LB AG I K KKTIXG Interesting Program Carried Ont. Benefit show Friday. The regular weekly meeting of the Epworth league, was held last even ing and was one of the most enter taining and instructive had In some time. Tho program was as follows: Instrumental solo. i Business. \ Instrumental duet. Scripture reading. Song. Prayer. Vocal duet. L : Talks on "Stady. Think, Ahn and Act," by four different members. ' Vocal solo. Tho Epworth league has arranged to get part of the proceeds of re ceipts at The Anderson theatre on next Friday afternoon and night. One of the attractions on'that date will bo, "Path of the Rainbow," a three | reel feature and two more reels will I also be shown. This will be a good chance to see good pictures aud at ] the samo tune help the league. The Clerk Guaranteed It ."A customer came into my store the other day and said to one of my clerks, 'have you anything that will j cure diarrhoea?' and my clerk went and got him a bottle of Chamberlain's j Colls, Cholera nnd Diarrhoea Rem edy, and said to htm, 'If this does not 1 cure you, I will not charfle you cont for it ' So he took it home and camo back In a day or two and said ho was cured," write- J. H. Berry] & Co., alt Creek, Va. For bale by all dealers. f \ ' - -' Denslay Only Trader. I London, Aug. 23.?The admiralty I (authorises a denial of the report that I the steamer Dunsley torpedoed short ly before the Arabic was sunk, was ! an armed patrol. The Dunsley was peaceful, unarmed trader. Quit Meat If Your Kidneys Act Badly [Take Tablespooofal of Salts'if Back Harts or Bladder Bothers. We are a nation of meat eaters and our blood is filled with uric acid, says a well-known authority, who warns us to be constantly on guard against kidney trouble. ! The kidneys do their untmost to j free tho blood of this irritating; ucld, ] but becomo; weak from the oyer-wk; they gpt sluggish; the cllminaUve Ms-] SUes clog and thus the waste Is re tained In the blood to potion the en tire system. When your kidneys ache and fool] hke lumps of lead, and you. have stinging pains in the back or the urine t* cloudy, fall of sediment, or the bladder Is Irritable, obliging you to seek reHef during the night; when you' have sovere headaches, nervous and dlssy spells, sleeplessness, aotd Stomach or rheumatism in bad] Sreuther, got from your pharmacist about four ounces of J*d Salts; take! a tablespoonful in ? glass of water before breakfast c_ch morning and in a few days your kidney* will act fine. This ,famous salts la made from the acid of grapes and lemon'juice, rom ttim mfm llthia nnd has been psed Cor generations to fluni, and stimulate elogged kidneys, to neutralise tho acids In urin? so ft la no longer a source of Irritation, thus ending uri nary and bladder disorders. Jad Safest it Inexpensive and cannot Injure; makes 'a delightful efferves cent llthla-water drink, sad nobody can make a mistake by taking a'little occasfftUAlly to keep the aMagys el* a an* retire. THE KIDNEYS IF Wa Should Drink Lots of Water and Eat Less .Meat, Says Noted Authority on Kidney Disorders r Recommends a Spoonful of Jad Salts In Glass of Water Before; . Breakfast to Stimulate Kidneys and Eliminate -J the Uric Acid Uric ncid In meat excites the kidneys, ihey become overworked, get sluggish, ache, and feel like lumps of. lead. The urin? becomes cloudy, tie bladder is irritated, and you may be obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. When the kidneys clog you must help them flush off the body's urinous waste or you'll be a real sick person shortly. At first you feet a dull misery iu the kidney region, you suffer from backache, sick headache, dizziness, stomach gets sour, tongue coated and you feel rheumatic twinges when the weather is bad. * 1 <? Eat less meut, - drink lots of water: also get from any pharmacist four ounces of Jad Salts; |sjke a tablcepoonful in a glusa of water before breakfast for a few days and you; kidneys will then act fine.- This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, aud has been used for generations to clean clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jnd Salts is inexpensive, cannot injure, makes a delightful effervescent lithin-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active. Pruggists here say they sell lots of Jad Salts to folks who believe in overcoming Iddney trouble while it is only trouble. ; EZL 0 T O P Spending all yon earn. Start a Bank Account deposit one dollar a week and net the saving habit. A dollar saved is a dollar made. The Savings Depart' nient of The Baak of Anderson The strongest bank in the county. Don't Overlook The Seybt Property This tract of about 125 acres is for sale. It lies about a mile from town, and can he bought in tracts from 10 acres up, and there's money in it. The price now is $ 125.00 to ? 175.00, according to the land?and ten years from today you couldn't buy 1t at TWICE this price. Prof. C. W. Riser bought fifteen acres last week, and is going to build out there on the new road that has recenly been made through this property. Let us show- it to you. Liriley & Watson Phones-647, 906, 310. PIEDMONT & NORTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY ANDERSON: Condensed Passenger Schedule, affective June 6, ?16. Arrivals No. rt.7:36 AM No. ?3.9:35 A- M. No. 86_. ..11:40 A. M. No. 37.1:10 P. M. No. 3S.., .. 3:40 P. M. Nc. 41.. ...8:00 P. M. No. 48... 6:60 P. M. No. ?6.10:80 P. M. Departures No. SO. iNo. 82. No. 34.. ... .. I No. 88 . ..' .6:26 A M, . 8:25 A M. .10:30 A M. i.12:10 P. M. v. .. .. ..2:30 P. Mi' ... .. 6:40 P. .. .0:16 P, A Good Electric Iron S A . Is a necessity at any j time but during the hottest weather n o household is complete }. without one. They are so handy, efficient and cool?the cost is very, very little. Southern Public Utilities Co. Phone 223 eace Tra?ne ALLSN, Manager. CASTORiA For Infants and 'A?ldren In Uaa For Over 30 Years Always bean. Signatare cf In the Household when you settle the vexed question of what is really good Tea By serving Your Grocer Has It